United States v. Jackman

48 F.3d 1, 41 Fed. R. Serv. 361, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2362, 1995 WL 41764
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 1995
Docket94-1759
StatusPublished
Cited by129 cases

This text of 48 F.3d 1 (United States v. Jackman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Jackman, 48 F.3d 1, 41 Fed. R. Serv. 361, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2362, 1995 WL 41764 (1st Cir. 1995).

Opinion

STAHL, Circuit Judge.

In this appeal of his conviction for bank robbery, defendant-appellant Gary W. Jack-man alleges an abuse of discretion in certain of the district court’s evidentiary rulings. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm'.

I.

BACKGROUND

On December 24, 1992, a man wearing a Florida Marlins baseball cap and a bulky-winter jacket walked into the Boston Five Cents Savings Bank in Revere, Massachusetts, handed teller Deanna Megna a note demanding money, stating he had a gun, and walked out after being given $1,740 from the teller’s drawer. Megna described the man immediately after the robbery as “skinny” and' “blond.” About a month later, Megna easily picked Jackman as the Revere robber out of a six-man lineup in Glastonbury, Connecticut, where Jackman was being held in connection with a bank robbery in Avon, Connecticut. Photographs of the Revere robber, taken by the bank’s surveillance camera, were shown by investigators to Jack-man’s ex-wife, Deborah Jackman, and to two acquaintances of Jackman, Harry Stetson and David Hurlock. Although the photographs showed only part of the robber’s face beneath a baseball cap and were somewhat grainy, Deborah Jackman, Stetson and Hur-loek all told investigators that the man in the photographs was Jackman. Prior to identi.fying Jackman as the man in the Revere robbery photos, Deborah Jackman, Stetson and Hurlock all viewed a much clearer photograph of the Connecticut robber taken during the course of that robbery and identified the robber as Jackman. Both the Connecticut robber and the Revere robber appear to be wearing a Florida Marlins baseball cap and a heavy winter coat.

At trial, Megna testified about the robbery and her identification of Jackman at the lineup, but she was unable to make an'in-court identification of Jackman. 1 James Genco, *3 the Assistant United States Attorney who prosecuted Jackman in Connecticut and who oversaw the Glastonbury lineup (which was viewed by witnesses to both the Revere and Connecticut bank robberies), testified about the composition of the lineup and Megna’s identification of Jackman as the Revere robber. The district court warned the government to' advise Genco not to make any references to the fact that he was a federal prosecutor from Connecticut and not Massachusetts, or that Jackman had been tried and convicted of another bank robbery. Nevertheless, the following colloquy took place as the prosecutor questioned Genco on direct examination about the Glastonbury lineup:

Q. Could you tell — give the jury a general description of those six individuals [in the lineup]?'
A. They were all basically selected because they fit the description of the robber. They were white males—
Ms. Conrad: Objection.
A. —with mustaches.
The court: Overruled.
A. They were all white males with mustaches and approximately the same color of hair that we had described to us.

Conrad, Jackman’s attorney, objected again, was overruled, and subsequently moved for a mistrial. On the videotape of the lineup shown to the jury, the six men appeared to have brown or darker hair; Megna had already testified that immediately after the robbery she had described the robber as having blond hair. Thus, Conrad argued, the jury could easily have inferred either that Megna or someone else had provided authorities with another description of the Revere robber as having darker hair, or, more sinister, that Genco arranged the lineup based on a description provided in another robbery altogether, and that Jackman was a suspect in that robbery as well. The court denied Jackman’s motion for a mistrial, but it instructed the jury “to disregard any of the testimony of this "witness with respect to the description of the individual and how this witness went about choosing the other members of the lineup. That evidence has been stricken and you’re not to consider it.”

Deborah Jackman, Stetson and Hurlock also testified at trial, offering their opinions as to the identity of the man in the Revere robbery photographs as is sometimes permitted under Fed.R.Evid. 701, which allows non-expert opinion testimony under certain conditions.

Deborah Jackman testified that she had known Jackman since 1972 and was married to him from 1976 until 1990 (the couple separated in 1988). After the couple separated, she continued to see Jackman every other weekend when Jackman, exercising his visitation rights, would pick up and return their children. She testified that Jackman had worn a dirty-blond mustache for many years, that he wore baseball caps, and that the coat worn by the Revere robber in the photographs was similar to one worn by Jackman before the couple separated. She told the jury that she recognized the man in the surveillance photographs as her ex-husband, and answered in the negative when asked if there was any doubt in her mind that it was he.

Hurlock testified that he had known Jack-man since 1986, when Jackman lived in Un-ionville, Connecticut. Hurlock told the jury that Jackman was an occasional customer at his convenience store, that both he and Jack-man were involved in coaching youth baseball teams from 1987 until 1990, and that in late 1990, Jackman came to his store wearing a bulky jacket not unlike that pictured in the Revere robbery photographs to discuss the possibility of coaching youth basketball. He also testified that Jackman wore a baseball cap the vast majority of the times he had seen him. Hurlock told the jury that he recognized the man in'the surveillance photographs as Jackman.

Stetson testified that he had known Jack-man since 1985 when Jackman and his former wife moved next door to him. In 1989, after the Jackmans separated, Jackman lived with Stetson for about .six months and Stetson continued to see Jackman occasionally until November 1991. Stetson, too, told the jury that he recognized the man pictured in the surveillance photographs and had no doubt that the man was Jackman.

*4 The jury also heard testimony from John Jackman, the defendant’s brother. He testified that, in his opinion, the man in the surveillance photographs was not his brother, and he pointed out to the jury what he thought were features distinguishing his brother from the man in the picture.

The jury convicted Jackman of one count of bank robbery, 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a). Jack-man raises several issues on appeal. He contends that the testimony of Deborah Jackman, Stetson and Hurlock should have been excluded because it was not helpful to the jury, it was not susceptible to cross-examination, .and it presented dangers of unfair prejudice that substantially outweighed its probative value. Jackman also argues that the district court committed reversible error by allowing Genco to testify at all, as well as by refusing to grant a mistrial after Genco alluded to a description of the robber not provided by anyone who testified in the case. We address each of these arguments in .turn.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 F.3d 1, 41 Fed. R. Serv. 361, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2362, 1995 WL 41764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jackman-ca1-1995.